
Hot work is any maintenance activity that can produce heat, sparks, flame, or ignition sources. In industrial plants, hot work must be controlled carefully because it can cause fire, explosion, burns, property damage, and serious injuries.
A Hot Work permit is used to make sure the work area is inspected, fire hazards are controlled, and emergency arrangements are ready before the work starts.
What Is Hot Work?
Hot work means any activity that may generate heat, sparks, open flame, or ignition.
Common hot work activities include:
- Welding
- Cutting
- Grinding
- Brazing
- Soldering
- Gas cutting
- Torch heating
- Hot tapping
- Use of spark-producing tools
- Any work that may create ignition source near flammable material
Hot work is common during mechanical maintenance, fabrication, shutdown jobs, equipment repair, piping work, and structural modification.
Why a Hot Work Permit Is Required
A Hot Work permit is required to control fire and explosion risks.
The permit helps confirm:
- Work area is inspected
- Flammable materials are removed or protected
- Fire extinguisher is available
- Fire watch is assigned if required
- Gas test is completed if required
- Equipment is isolated
- Area is barricaded
- Workers are trained
- PPE is available
- Emergency response is understood
The permit is not only paperwork. It is a safety control before starting the job.
Common Hot Work Hazards
Hot work hazards include:
- Fire
- Explosion
- Burns
- Smoke and fumes
- Eye injury
- Hot metal
- Falling sparks
- Gas cylinder hazards
- Electrical shock from welding machine
- Flammable vapor ignition
- Combustible dust ignition
- Damage to nearby cables or hoses
These hazards must be reviewed before starting the work.
Jobs That May Require a Hot Work Permit
Hot work permits may be required for:
- Welding brackets
- Cutting steel structure
- Grinding pipe supports
- Repairing machine guards
- Fabricating platforms
- Cutting bolts
- Welding piping
- Removing rust by grinding
- Cutting old equipment
- Repairing crane structure
- Maintenance shutdown work
Each company may have its own definition and permit requirements.
Hot Work Permit Requirements
Before issuing a Hot Work permit, verify the following:
| Requirement | What to Verify |
|---|---|
| Work location | Exact area and equipment identified |
| Work scope | Welding, cutting, grinding, or other hot work |
| Risk assessment | JSA or risk assessment completed |
| Flammable materials | Removed or protected |
| Fire extinguisher | Available and suitable |
| Fire watch | Assigned if required |
| Gas testing | Completed if required |
| Ventilation | Adequate for fumes and gases |
| Isolation | Equipment and energy sources isolated |
| Barricade | Area controlled and warning signs installed |
| PPE | Suitable PPE available |
| Emergency plan | Workers know emergency response |
Area Inspection Before Hot Work
Before starting hot work, inspect the work area carefully.
Check for:
- Flammable liquids
- Combustible materials
- Oil and grease
- Paint containers
- Gas cylinders
- Plastic materials
- Wooden materials
- Cable trays
- Rubber hoses
- Dust accumulation
- Nearby chemical storage
- Open drains
- Poor ventilation
If hazards cannot be removed, they must be protected or controlled.
Removing Flammable Materials
Flammable and combustible materials should be removed from the hot work area whenever possible.
Examples include:
- Fuel
- Paint
- Oil
- Grease
- Solvents
- Rags
- Plastic covers
- Paper
- Wood
- Chemical containers
If removal is not possible, use fire blankets, barriers, or other approved protection.
Fire Watch
A fire watch may be required during and after hot work.
The fire watch person monitors the area for sparks, smoke, fire, and unsafe conditions.
Fire watch responsibilities may include:
- Watching for fire during work
- Checking areas below and nearby
- Keeping fire extinguisher ready
- Stopping work if unsafe
- Monitoring after work completion
- Reporting fire hazards immediately
The fire watch should not leave the area while hot work is in progress unless properly relieved.
Fire Extinguisher Requirements
A suitable fire extinguisher must be available near the hot work area.
Check:
- Correct extinguisher type
- Valid inspection tag
- Easy access
- Pressure gauge condition
- No physical damage
- Worker knows how to use it
The extinguisher should be selected based on the fire risk in the area.
Gas Testing
Gas testing may be required when hot work is performed in areas where flammable gas or vapor may be present.
Gas testing may be required in:
- Confined spaces
- Tank areas
- Chemical areas
- Fuel areas
- Process lines
- Pits and trenches
- Areas with poor ventilation
Gas testing should be done by an authorized person using approved equipment.
Ventilation
Hot work can produce smoke, fumes, and gases.
Good ventilation is important, especially in enclosed or poorly ventilated areas.
Check:
- Natural ventilation
- Exhaust ventilation
- Fume extraction
- Air movement
- Confined space ventilation if applicable
- Worker exposure to fumes
Respiratory protection may be required depending on the material and work condition.
Welding Machine Safety
For welding work, check the welding machine and accessories.
Inspect:
- Welding cable condition
- Electrode holder
- Ground clamp
- Cable insulation
- Machine earthing
- Power supply
- Loose connections
- Hot terminals
- Damaged plugs
- Cable routing
Damaged welding cables can cause electric shock, short circuit, and fire.
Grinding Safety
Grinding is common hot work because it produces sparks.
Before grinding, check:
- Correct grinding disc
- Disc condition
- Disc expiry if applicable
- Grinder guard installed
- Handle installed
- Correct RPM rating
- Eye and face protection
- Spark direction
- Nearby flammable materials
- Secure workpiece
Never use damaged grinding discs.
Gas Cylinder Safety
For gas cutting or welding using cylinders, check:
- Cylinders are secured upright
- Flashback arrestors installed
- Regulators in good condition
- Hoses not damaged
- No gas leakage
- Cylinder caps used during transport
- Oxygen and fuel gas separated properly
- Cylinders away from heat and sparks
Gas cylinders must be handled carefully.
PPE for Hot Work
Hot work PPE may include:
- Welding helmet
- Face shield
- Safety glasses
- Leather gloves
- Flame-resistant clothing
- Safety shoes
- Hearing protection
- Respirator if required
- Apron or welding jacket
PPE should be selected based on the task and hazard.
Barricading the Area
The hot work area should be controlled to protect other workers.
Use:
- Barricade tape
- Warning signs
- Welding screens
- Spark barriers
- Fire blankets
- Restricted access
This helps prevent eye exposure, burns, fire spread, and unauthorized entry.
Hot Work Near Cable Trays
Hot work near cable trays is high risk.
Sparks can damage cable insulation and create future electrical faults.
Before hot work near cables:
- Protect cables with fire blanket
- Keep sparks away from cable tray
- Avoid grinding toward cables
- Inspect cables after work
- Use cold work method if possible
- Consider isolating affected equipment if required
Cable damage from hot work can cause serious failures later.
Hot Work in Confined Spaces
Hot work in confined spaces is very high risk.
It may require:
- Confined space permit
- Hot work permit
- Gas testing
- Continuous monitoring
- Ventilation
- Standby person
- Rescue plan
- Suitable PPE
- Fire watch
- Communication method
Never perform hot work in a confined space without proper approval and controls.
Hot Work Checklist
| Check Point | What to Verify |
|---|---|
| Permit | Hot Work permit approved |
| JSA | Risk assessment completed |
| Area inspection | Flammable materials removed |
| Fire protection | Fire extinguisher available |
| Fire watch | Assigned if required |
| Gas testing | Completed if required |
| Ventilation | Adequate |
| Tools | Welding/grinding tools inspected |
| Cylinders | Secured and leak-free |
| PPE | Suitable PPE used |
| Barricade | Area controlled |
| Post-work check | Area monitored after completion |
Common Hot Work Mistakes
Common mistakes include:
- Starting work without permit
- Not removing flammable materials
- No fire extinguisher nearby
- No fire watch
- Grinding toward cables or hoses
- Using damaged welding cables
- Using damaged grinding discs
- Poor gas cylinder handling
- No gas test in hazardous area
- No post-work fire watch
- Poor housekeeping
These mistakes can cause serious fire incidents.
Practical Field Example
A maintenance team needs to grind a steel bracket near a cable tray.
Before starting, the team should obtain a Hot Work permit, inspect the area, protect nearby cables using a fire blanket, assign fire watch if required, keep a fire extinguisher nearby, barricade the area, and make sure sparks are directed away from cables and flammable materials.
After completion, the area should be inspected to confirm there is no smoke, hot material, or hidden fire risk.
When to Stop Hot Work
Stop hot work immediately if:
- Fire extinguisher is missing
- Flammable material is found nearby
- Gas test is not acceptable
- Fire watch is not available when required
- Wind changes spark direction toward hazards
- Welding cables are damaged
- Grinding disc is damaged
- Gas leak is suspected
- Permit conditions are not followed
- New hazard appears
Stopping unsafe hot work can prevent a major incident.
Safety Notes
Hot work can cause fire, explosion, burns, and serious injuries.
Always follow the approved Hot Work permit procedure, JSA, and site safety rules.
Never perform hot work near flammable materials, chemical areas, or confined spaces without proper controls.
Always inspect the area after work completion.
Conclusion
A Hot Work permit is an important safety control in industrial maintenance.
It helps confirm that fire hazards are identified, flammable materials are removed or protected, firefighting equipment is available, workers are protected, and the work area is monitored.
For welding, cutting, grinding, and other spark-producing work, proper hot work control is essential to prevent fires, explosions, injuries, and equipment damage.



